Sony will inevitably follow up the PlayStation 5 with its next generation home console at some point. Based on court documents from its US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) trial over the attempt to acquire Activision Blizzard in 2023, Microsoft believes its next-gen Xbox console and Sony's PlayStation 6 will launch in 2028.
A new claim, however, advances that timeline, suggesting the PlayStation parent is further along the development cycle for the PS5 successor.
The design of the chip that will power the PS6 is reportedly ready, and Sony could begin producing the SoC for testing in late 2025.
The information comes from KeplerL2, a reliable leaker who previously shed light on PS5 Pro specs before the console launched.
In several posts on games discussion board NeoGAF, the leaker claimed the PS6's SoC design was complete. According to them, Sony will kick off production on the first batch of chips for testing towards the end of 2025. “PS6 is design complete and in pre-si validation already, with A0 tapeout scheduled for late this year,” the leaker said on the forum. “Pre-si validation” — or pre-silicon validation — refers to testing and validating a semiconductor design via computer simulations and virtual modelling before finalising it for physical production. “Tape-out”, on the other hand, refers to the final step in the design process before chips are sent out for fabrication on a wafer.